Communal eating and drinking in early Roman Mediterranean France: a possible tavern at Lattara, c. 125-75 BC.
Luley, Benjamin P. ; Piques, Gael
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Introduction
In cities throughout the ancient Roman world, the tavern, known in
Latin by various terms such as tabernae, cauponae and popinae, was a
vital social institution, functioning at once as an important source of
meals, as well as a public space for social interaction (Kleberg 1957;
Monteix 2010). In particular, the importance of taverns seems to have
often been linked to the presence of artisans, labourers and other
workers within urban society who did not always produce their own food,
but instead also relied on taverns and markets for procuring daily
sustenance. Despite the social importance of these ancient institutions,
defining what exactly constitutes a tavern, and then in turn identifying
archaeologically the physical characteristics shared by all taverns, can
hardly be said to be straightforward. This is especially the case given
the plethora of ancient terms that are known; there was clearly no
universal meaning for 'tavern' across the Empire. For the
purposes of this article, a 'tavern' is defined as an
institution providing food and drink to clients through monetary
exchange. The existence of a tavern thus implies the presence of an
economy based upon specialised artisan production, rather than simply
subsistence production at the domestic level, as well as the
commodification of food resources and, by extension, the commodification
of labour.
To date, very few taverns have been identified archaeologically in
places such as Roman Gaul, perhaps in part due to the difficulty of
distinguishing between taverns and other social institutions based upon
their material remains (see Badan et al. 1997; Poux & Pranyies 2009
for structures interpreted as taverns in Gaul; and Barberan et al. 2012
for evidence of a market). In a recent review of the archaeological
evidence for taverns from the Roman provinces of Belgian Gaul and Upper
and Lower Germania, Demarolle and Petit (2011: 306-13) have outlined a
series of criteria for identifying these structures in the
archaeological record, including: the concentration of a large number of
ovens (rather than a single oven per domestic unit); the storage of food
and other goods well beyond the needs of a single family; the
concentration of millstones for grinding grain into flour; an
over-representation in the ceramic assemblages of drinking vessels; and
the presence of cuts of meat for large numbers of people.
In this light, the recent discovery at the excavations of the
Celtic settlement of Lattara (modern Lattes), in Mediterranean France,
of a large communal structure corresponding to these characteristics,
represents an unusual find. In zone 75 of the excavations (Figure 1),
the authors uncovered the remains of a large structure, dating to 125-75
BC, that probably functioned as a kind of public space for feeding large
numbers of people, and which has been interpreted as some form of early
tavern. The appearance of this 'tavern' at Lattara probably
corresponded with significant socio-economic changes occurring in the
local society after the Roman conquest of the region during 125-121 BC.
These changes included a shift from a subsistence economy to one with
greater artisan production (above that of a domestic level) and an
increase in the monetisation of economic exchange.
Context
During the Iron Age (750-125 BC), large parts of Mediterranean
France were inhabited by peoples speaking a Celtic language. These
Celtic peoples, grouped together into densely settled, fortified sites
from the sixth century BC onwards, engaged in important commercial
trading relations with Etruscan, Massaliote Greek and Italic merchants.
The region was conquered by the Roman Republic in a series of campaigns
between 125-121 BC, and incorporated into the province of Gallia
Transalpina, later renamed Gallia Narbonensis under Caesar Augustus. The
site of ancient Lattara, which was an important centre of trade during
the Iron Age and early Roman period, is today located just to the south
of the modern town of Lattes in the French departement of Herault in the
region of Languedoc-Roussillon. The settlement was located at a
strategic point where, in ancient times, the Lez River flowed into a
shallow lagoon bordering the Mediterranean. From around 500 BC to the
gradual abandonment of the site in the second century AD, Lattara was a
thriving port of trade and densely occupied settlement (Figure 1) (Py
2009). The settlement itself consisted of long rows of
stone-and-mud-brick rooms separated by narrow streets and enclosed by
ramparts reinforced with towers. By the second century BC, Lattara had
expanded well beyond the 3.5ha enclosed by the ramparts to cover an area
of approximately 11-12ha; relatively little is known about the
settlement located beyond these ramparts (Py 2009: 100). Although the
architecture and urban layout remained largely unchanged immediately
following the Roman conquest, the walls of the town and the traditional
blocks of small houses were demolished after around 50 BC, and the
population began to spread out beyond the traditional limits of the
settlement in larger, courtyard-style houses.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
During the Iron Age, it appears that food production at Lattara was
largely conducted at a domestic level, based upon the even distribution
of single bread ovens and grinding mills throughout the settlement (Py
1992a, 1992b). Although some craft specialisation was present at Lattara
during the Iron Age, there is little evidence to suggest that this was
anything more than the work of part-time specialists, with most families
probably spending a great deal of time growing crops and herding animals
in the fields beyond the walls of the settlement (Py 2009: 280-81). At
the same time, there is little evidence for a monetised or market-based
economy before the first century BC (Py 2006; Luley 2008).
By contrast, with the imposition of Roman rule in the province at
the end of the second century BC, there was a significant increase in
trade and a centralisation of the production of various local
commodities for export, meaning that more and more people were probably
engaged primarily in activities other than the growing of their own
food. Additionally, small-and medium-sized bronze coins issued from the
Greek colony of Massalia became increasingly common at Lattara between
125 and 75 BC, and there is good evidence for at least partial
monetisation of the economy by the end of the first century BC (Py
2006). For example, a bakery, replete with a large bread oven and a
grinding mill, probably existed in zone 5 at Lattara for the period
50-25 BC (Py 1992a: 228-29; Py 1992b: 277-78; Sternberg 1994: 85-89).
Within the floor layers of this bakery, 19 small coins were uncovered,
seemingly suggesting that by this date at the latest, food resources had
become at least partially commoditised (Luley 2008: 184-88).
Furthermore, starting in the first century BC, increasingly more of the
agricultural land around settlements such as Lattara was being exploited
by large villas for growing grapes to supply large-scale wine production
(Buffat & Pellecuer 2001). Lastly, throughout this period, the Roman
Republic rewarded Roman veterans and colonists with land in a series of
centuriations (see Maune 2000), probably alienating some, if not many,
native Celts from their traditional agricultural lands, and perhaps
forcing them to sell their labour force. Thus, by the first century BC,
the economic conditions at Lattara would have probably encouraged the
development of institutions for feeding artisans and labourers
specialising in the production of commodities that were not directly
related to subsistence.
The archaeological evidence
The possible 'tavern' was discovered during excavation of
occupation levels dating to the second and first centuries BC in zone 75
(Figure 2). The structure was strategically located at the intersection
of two important streets of the settlement, as well as at one of the
entrances to the town in the northern ramparts. For the period c. 125-75
BC (phase 75C2), a relatively large complex of rooms occupied zone 75,
oriented around a central courtyard. This structure continued to be
occupied between 75 and 50 BC (phase C1), although it no longer appears
to have been specifically used as a tavern. After 50 BC, the entire
courtyard structure was torn down and a number of public buildings were
erected in its place.
For the period c. 125-75 BC, the structure occupying zone 75
consisted of at least two wings arranged to the east and south of a
large central courtyard paved with river pebbles, which was separated
from the street to the west by a stone-and-mud-brick wall (Figure 3). A
relatively large gateway in this wall allowed access from the street
into the courtyard. The southern wing of this complex consisted of a
single room: sector 6. The eastern wing consisted of two rooms: sector
3, as well as traces of a room just to the north. Unfortunately, the
remains of the northern half of the courtyard, as well as most of the
room to the north of sector 3, have been lost due to ploughing in the
twentieth century. Archaeologists have, however, uncovered a trench that
almost certainly traces the outlines of stone walls delimiting the
northern half of the courtyard. The stones from these walls were later
taken away for reuse in later structures. Doorways in both the northern
wall of sector 6 and the western wall of sector 3 allowed circulation
between the courtyard and these two rooms, suggesting that the entire
complex functioned together during this period. As was typical for
Lattara (de Chazelles 1996), and more generally for Mediterranean France
in the Iron Age, the architecture of the different rooms consisted of
dry limestone foundations, which provided a base for packed earthen
walls. All of the rooms in zone 75 also had simple, packed earthen
floors. The orientation of sectors 3 and 6 around a central courtyard is
not entirely unusual for the Iron Age occupation at Lattara; several
structures consisting of rooms oriented around a central courtyard,
referred to as 'courtyard houses' (maisons a corns), have been
found at the site for the period between the third and late second
centuries BC (Dietler et al. 2008). The specialised functions of sectors
3 and 6 do suggest, however, that zone 75 may have been more than simply
a domestic space during this period.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Sector 6
In sector 6, for the period 125-75 BC, excavations revealed three
large, bell-shaped ovens in a row along the presumed eastern wall of the
room, as well as a row of three stone bases along the western wall of
the room, which were probably used for grinding flour (Figure 4).
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
The three ovens were round and consisted of an inner wall of
reddish, fired clay, surrounded on the outside by a thick layer of
ochre-coloured clay (Figure 5). Although only the lower portions were
preserved, and based on ethnographic comparisons, the ovens were
probably dome-shaped, with a large opening in the top. Bell-shaped ovens
such as those found in sector 6 were common at Lattara in earlier
centuries, as well as for Iron Age Mediterranean France more generally
(Py 1990: 434-37, 688-89; 1992b). In ancient times, these ovens were
referred to as a clibanus among the Romans, and as a kribanos by the
ancient Greeks. This type of oven is still common in parts of North
Africa and the Middle East today, and is often referred to as a tabouna,
tannur or tandir (Dupaigne 1999; Luley 2014: 45). Such an oven is used
for baking unleavened flatbread, either by sticking the dough on the
inside of the oven, or, in some cases, by baking the bread in a flat
dish placed over the mouth of the oven.
The stone bases, which stood 16-24cm above the floor, were built of
unmortared limestone blocks, arranged in a circular form (Figure 6).
Based upon other examples from Lattara and elsewhere in the region, they
most probably functioned as a support for a millstone used for grinding
flour (Py 1992a: 223-27).
Although two other examples exist of ovens being associated with
bases for millstones (Py 1992a: 224; 1992b: 261, 264-65, 273-74), sector
6 of zone 75 is unique with regard to the scale of flour grinding and
flatbread baking. Before the first century BC at Lattara, almost all of
these bread ovens were found in domestic contexts, with one oven per
domestic space, rather than several grouped together in a specialised
workshop (Py 1992b). Other than zone 75, the only other case where ovens
were grouped together was from block 4-south, for the period 300-250 BC.
Here, three ovens were built into an earthen bench along a wall, and
with a stone base nearby, which was probably used for a millstone,
suggesting perhaps a partial specialisation in bread baking (Py 1992b:
273; Lebeaupin 1994: 65-66). In this case, however, all three ovens were
small, with each measuring approximately 50cm in diameter. By contrast,
the ovens from zone 75 are quite large, measuring 121, 123 and 83cm in
diameter. Based upon both the size and number of mills and bread ovens,
sector 6 was clearly used for producing flatbread well beyond the needs
of a single nuclear family.
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
Sector 3
Compared with other rooms at Lattara for the same period, sector 3
is noteworthy for the presence of earthen benches running along most of
the walls of the room. Although little remained of these benches, their
location can be reconstructed through a border of river pebbles in a
mixture of orange sandy material running along almost all the walls of
the room (Figure 7). The sole exception to this, in both cases, was
along the northern part of the western wall and most of the northern
wall, precisely at the placement of doorways. This border of river
pebbles and orange sand probably provided a level base for the packed
earth benches in accordance with other examples from Lattara (de
Chazelles 1996: 310-12; Py 2009: 202-203). A large rectangular hearth of
fired clay was present in the middle of the northern half of the room.
Mud-brick benches built along parts of interior walls are certainly not
uncommon at Lattara, and would have served many functions. The presence
of benches along all sides of the room in a U-shape is, however, much
rarer. Only three other examples of this kind of room are known from
Lattara, all dating to the third century BC (de Chazelles 1996: 310). In
all of these cases, archaeologists have identified these rooms as dining
halls. More specifically, the presence of three benches, one along each
wall so as to form a U-shape, bears a striking similarity with the Roman
triclinium. In the Roman world, a triclinium was a dining hall, with
couches or benches situated along three sides of the room, allowing
diners (ideally three per bench) to recline while dining (Dunabin 1991).
The fact that the floor in this room was relatively clean of debris,
such as ash, charcoal, animal bones and had only a low number of very
small ceramic fragments found lying flat on the surface of the floor,
reinforces the idea that sector 3 was indeed a dining hall.
Interestingly, no other examples of this kind of room have been found at
Lattara from the second and first centuries BC.
[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]
Interpretation
In summary then, for the period 125-75 BC, sector 6 of zone 75
appears to have been some kind of a bakery, producing flatbread well
beyond the needs of a single nuclear family, while sector 3 appears to
have functioned as a dining hall. What is striking about zone 75 for
this time period is that each room had a clearly defined function. Even
for the second and first halves of the first century BC, the degree of
specialisation of the different rooms within any given domestic block at
Lattara was limited (Py 1996; 2009: 108-111, 135-38). For example, zones
4-north, 5, 30 and 35 (all of which were contemporary with the courtyard
structure in zone 75) consisted of long rows of connected single rooms,
separated by narrow streets (Py & Lopez 1990; Py 2004). While the
general function of the room can be discerned in some cases, such as
cooking and storage vs dining, socialising and sleeping, these rooms
often appear to have been multi-functional.
[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]
The original hypothesis of the authors was that sector 6 perhaps
functioned as a specialised bakery, intended for producing flatbread on
a large scale. As mentioned above, one bakery is known from zone 5 at
Lattara for the period 50-25BC. While this bakery was seemingly not
associated with any other structures, sectors 3 and 6 clearly functioned
together within the same building: both rooms opened out onto the
central courtyard, and the level of river pebbles in the courtyard was
probably contemporary with their floors. One possibility, of course, is
that the courtyard (sector 3) and sector 6 were both part of a large
house belonging to a wealthy baker, perhaps similar to the owner of the
luxurious domus in Pompeii, known as the House of the Chaste Lovers,
which had, among other rooms, a large bakery and a triclinium (Urbanus
2010). This in itself would be quite exceptional, as evidence for a
rigid socio-economic hierarchy at Lattara throughout the Iron Age is
quite lacking (Py 2009: 333). No rooms for sleeping have been found at
zone 73, although these could admittedly have been either part of an
upper storey, leaving little trace in the archaeological record, or to
the north of the courtyard, where preservation from this period has been
poor. More importantly, however, there is nothing ostentatious about the
architecture of zone 75; no decorative elements have been found to
suggest an elite residence, as, for example, with the Hellenistic
courtyard houses from the site of Glanum in Western Provence, which also
date to the second and first centuries BC.
An alternative hypothesis is that zone 75 was not the private'
residence of a specific family, but was perhaps rather a
'public' space where relatively large numbers of people could
gather and eat together communally. Furthermore, the faunal and ceramic
data certainly seem to support this interpretation. It should be pointed
out that while flatbread was quite obviously an important food produced
in sector 6, it was also, apparently, not the only food cooked in the
room. A large number of fish and animal bones were found strewn across
the floor, especially around the doorway, as well as in the layers of
ash filling the three ovens. These bones correspond with the remains
typically associated with preparing and cooking meals. For example, with
the fish bones from the floor layers of sector 6, there is an
over-representation of bones from the head of the fish, as well as
scales, suggesting that the fish were fileted and prepared here. By
contrast, the floor level of sector 3 produced mostly fish vertebrae,
something associated with consumption rather than preparation, and that
again indicates that this room functioned as a dining hall. Despite
being normally associated with flatbread, archaeological and
ethnographical examples attest to the fact that the three bell-shaped
ovens can be used for other purposes as well (Py 2009: 219).
Even more importantly, a large deposit of animal bones was found in
a thin layer of soil covering the river pebbles in the courtyard,
probably corresponding with refuse disposal towards the end of the
structure's occupation (Figure 8). According to preliminary faunal
analysis, these bones represent pieces of dismembered cow and sheep
carcasses. Rather than representing the remains of an entire carcass,
they are instead from specific cuts of meat, probably associated with
food preparation for a relatively large number of people.
Likewise, the ceramic evidence from zone 75 clearly shows several
differences compared to assemblages found in domestic spaces at Lattara
for the same period (zones 4-north, 5, 30 and 35), again suggesting that
zone 75 was not merely one such space. Here, the ceramic data are
exclusively from floor layers of these five different zones, probably
representing the accumulated debris of broken ceramic vessels in use
during the structure's occupation.
Generally speaking, the kinds of vessels present in the domestic
spaces from the contemporary residential areas of Lattara were also
present in the occupation levels from zone 75: Beige Ware pitchers for
pouring liquids; fineware black gloss bowls for drinking imported from
Italy (almost all Campanian A); black gloss plates and larger black
gloss bowls for eating (also Campanian A); large, locally made,
non-wheel-thrown ceramic bowls for eating and serving; large
non-wheel-thrown ceramics, called 'jattes', for cooking and
serving; and non-wheel-thrown cooking pots. Two types of vessel are,
however, over-represented in the assemblage: large non-wheel-thrown
bowls and jattes, and black gloss drinking bowls.
For the first trend, compared with the domestic contexts for the
same period, there are proportionally far fewer cooking pots from zone
75, and far more non-wheel-thrown bowls and jattes (Figure 9). In zones
4-north, 5, 30 and 35, cooking pots made up 60-80% of all
non-wheel-thrown vessels, with jattes accounting for less than 13%. By
contrast, in zone 75, cooking pots made up only 37% of the assemblage of
non-wheel-thrown vessels, and jattes represented 24% of the assemblage.
Cooking pots, as the name suggests, were often used for boiling food by
being placed over a small hearth, but also for storage and drawing
water. They would, therefore, probably have been less useful for cooking
at zone 75, where the presence of three large bell-shaped ovens for
cooking perhaps explains their under-representation. On the other hand,
a larger number of bowls and jattes would have been necessary if crowds
of people needed to be served food. Of the fragments of bowls and jattes
from zone 75 from the occupation levels dating to 125-75 BC, most were
quite large, with all but one measuring between 22 and 38cm in diameter
(Figure 10). Conversely, in a domestic context, a significant number of
these large bowls and jattes would have been unnecessary for small daily
meals.
[FIGURE 8 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 9 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 10 OMITTED]
With regard to the Campanian black gloss drinking bowls, there is a
much greater proportion of this type of vessel present at zone 75 than
for the contemporary zones 4-north, 5, 30 and 35 (Figure 11).
Specifically, whereas in these other zones there is a relatively even
proportion of Campanian drinking bowls, plates and eating bowls, in zone
75 there is a ratio of two drinking bowls for every plate and bowl. The
implication of this overrepresentation is that drinking was a much more
important activity in zone 75, something that certainly fits nicely with
the presumed function of sector 3 as a dining hall, perhaps in the style
of a Roman triclinium. Furthermore, black gloss plates and bowls may
have been less important if food was served in larger, non-wheel-thrown
jattes and bowls. One can easily imagine a scenario in which multiple
diners ate from a large communal, non-wheel-thrown bowl, perhaps using
the flatbread as individual plates, in a similar way to dining customs
among many traditional societies today.
Finally, a votive deposit (DP75162) found in the courtyard of zone
75 gives further insight into its possible function (Figure 12). Votive
deposits, usually found buried in the floors of houses in
non-wheel-thrown cooking pots, were common throughout Iron Age
Mediterranean France, and often consisted of an offering of a cut of
meat (generally pork or beef) or of some other animal (such as part or
all of a bird or a snake) (Fabre 1990). This deposit, however, was more
unusual, consisting of a shallow, circular pit dug into the courtyard
near the door to sector 3, within which was deposited a stone millstone
base (meta), along with a Campanian drinking bowl (type CAMP-A 27c) and
a Campanian plate (type CAMP-A 36), both turned upside down (Figure 10).
A number of cuts of meat were placed under the millstone. The
combination of a stone millstone, a bowl for drinking and a plate with
cuts of meat could be interpreted as representing the principal
activities associated with zone 75: grinding flour, producing large
amounts of flatbread, consuming food (particularly meat) and drinking.
[FIGURE 11 OMITTED]
Conclusion
Based upon the evidence presented here, it appears that the
courtyard complex of zone 75 functioned as a space for feeding large
numbers of people, well beyond the needs of a single domestic unit or
nuclear family. This is unusual, as large, 'public' communal
spaces for preparing large amounts of food and eating together are
essentially non-existent in Iron Age Mediterranean France. The presence
of a number of large ovens and bases for grinding mills, the
over-representation in the ceramic assemblages of drinking vessels and
the presence of cuts of meat for large numbers of people, all match with
the list of archaeological indicators of taverns given by Demarolle and
Petit (2011: 306-13). Furthermore, the appearance of this structure
seems to correspond to a period in which there was a shift from a
domestic-based subsistence economy to one increasingly based upon
specialised artisan production. Although no coins were found within zone
75, the overall evidence from coins at the site certainly suggests the
possibility that the food and drink distributed within the structure may
have been exchanged through currency. In the context of a growing
market-based economy, it is certainly possible that by the beginning of
the first century BC there would have been an increasing demand among
labourers and artisans for a place akin to a tavern to eat meals and
socialise. The structure from zone 75 could have fulfilled this new
need, and was ideally located at one of the town's entrances, with
a large gateway of its own for allowing clients to access the courtyard
from the street.
[FIGURE 12 OMITTED]
In this light, zone 75 arguably illustrates the relationship
between taverns and a specific mode of production: in this case, one in
which a relatively significant proportion of the population was no
longer simply engaged in subsistence agriculture, but in artisanal
production, and therefore increasingly reliant on alternative sources
for daily meals. Due to the clearly precocious nature of the communal
structure from zone 75, which dates to a period when these
socio-economic changes were starting to occur, it is difficult to
distinguish fully between a tavern and a site for communal eating.
Certainly, the larger archaeological context of Lattara after the Roman
conquest suggests that the economy was in the process of intensifying to
the extent that labourers and artisans may have needed a new place for
obtaining food, which they themselves were no longer always producing on
a daily basis. At the same time, however, it is not impossible that food
and drink may have also, under certain circumstances, been distributed
along more traditional forms of economic exchange, such as commensality
and gift giving, alongside more impersonal monetary exchange. Finally,
although the communal structure at Lattara represents one of the few
possible taverns for Roman Mediterranean France, and certainly the
earliest, it is quite possible that its singularity is because few other
sites have been as extensively excavated for so long. It is thus
certainly possible that other indigenous sites may have also developed
similar structures to the one at zone 75 in response to a changing and
intensifying economy following the Roman conquest, a possibility that
underscores an important avenue of research opening on the economy of
the Roman world.
doi: 10.15184/aqy.2015.184
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Received: 3 November 2014; Accepted: 5 February 2015; Revised: 25
March 2015
Benjamin P. Luley (1,3) & Gael Piques (2,3)
(1) Departments of Classics and Anthropology, Gettysburg College,
300 North Washington Street, Gettysburg, PA 17325, USA (Email:
bluley@gettysburg.edu)
(2) ASM (Archeologie des Societes Mediterraneennes), UMR5140,
Universite Montpellier 3, CNRS, MCC, F-34000 Montpellier, France (Email:
gael.piques@cnrs.fr)
(3) Labex ARCHIMEDE programme IA- ANR-11-LABX-0032-01, Site
Saint-Charles, F-34000 Montpellier, France